Daniel Salée's research in recent years has focussed on the politics of ethnicity and citizenship in the Canadian and Quebec contexts, with a particular emphasis on Indigenous peoples/settler state relations, the handling of ethnocultural diversity by hegemonic Eurodescendant populations and socioinstitutional processes of otherization and marginalization of members of racialized minorities. In addition to this current research focus, his scholarly interests also cover issues related to Quebec nationalism, Quebec political culture and federal-provincial relations in Canada. His work has been published in a variety of international and national scholarly journals and edited collections. Dr. Salée is a founding member of DIALOG -- le réseau québécois d'échange sur les questions autochtones and a member of the Chaire de recherche sur l'immigration, l'ethnicité et la citoyenneté (CRIEC) at Université du Québec à Montréal.

Teaching activities

SCPA 201 Introduction to Public Policy
SCPA 412 Senior Research Seminar
POLI 398L Indigenous Peoples and the State in Canada
POLI 490Q Alternative Political Science
POLI 638/803 Seminar in Canadian and Quebec Politics
POLI 645 Indigenous Peoples and the State

Salée, Daniel and Lévesque, Carole (2010). “Representing Aboriginal Self-Government and First Nations/State Relations: Political Agency and the Management of the Boreal Forest in Eeyou Istchee”, International Journal of Canadian Studies/Revue internationale d’études canadiennes, no. 41, pp. 99-135.